The Institute for Reforming Government is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization that seeks to simplify government at every level by offering policy solutions to thought leaders in American government in the areas of tax reform, government inefficiency, and burdensome regulations. IRG will work as a conduit among several statewide, regional, and national organizations to put forward reform through policy summaries, specific policy proposals, as well as peer-reviewed studies and other means, in order to open the dialog on the need for continued government reform.

It is our duty to shed light into the dark corners of a government that has overstepped its bounds. From local municipalities to state governments across the country to the federal government, the Institute for Reforming Government will work to address all levels of government operations and how they can best serve the people they represent. The outcomes of our work will be made public and will showcase where positive reforms may be necessary for the further betterment of society.

Mission Statement

The Institute for Reforming Government’s main focus will be to remove the onerous barriers and red tape separating the individual from an efficient and functioning government. Be it local, state, or federal governance, it is the mission of the Institute for Reforming Government to encourage reform for all levels of government, based on what has worked in state across the country. Through diligent research and effective outreach, the Institute for Reforming Government will work to remove the stumbling blocks that have created a slow-moving, expensive behemoth of governance that works against the will of the people.

What We Do

The Institute for Reforming Government as an organization has realized that the people have been under the thumb of onerous regulation and taxation for far too long. In response to this, the organization is committing itself to tackling tax reform, inefficiencies in government, and burdensome regulations. The Institute for Reforming Government will be working as a conduit among a number of statewide, regional, and national organizations to put forward policy summaries, specific policy proposals, as well as peer-reviewed studies to the public and elected officials in order to open the dialog on the need for government reform.

Scott K. Walker, National Honorary Chairman

Scott Walker knows a thing or two about bold leadership.

In 2010, the unemployment rate in his state was 9.3% and soon after, he inherited a $3.6 billion budget deficit. After eight years of his leadership as governor, employment was at historic highs and unemployment fell below 3%. Plus, the state finished with a budget surplus every year he was in office.

Scott Walker’s reforms helped the state invest more actual dollars than ever before into schools, freeze college tuition for six years in a row, reduce taxes by more than $8 billion and build a rainy day fund 190 times larger than when they started – all while still fully funding their pension liabilities.

Most importantly, Scott Walker took power out of the hands of the big government special interests and put it firmly into the hands of the hard-working taxpayers. At one point, more than 100,000 protesters (many brought in from other places) tried to intimidate him. They even tried to recall him.

But Scott Walker was unintimidated. On June 5, 2012, he became the first governor in American history to survive a recall election. In fact, he actually received more votes in the special election than in the original election. Two years later, he was reelected to a full term.

During his tenure, Wisconsin lead the way on budget reform, education reform, tax reform, health reform, collective bargaining reform, and workforce reform. It went from one of the worst states for business to one of the best. Wisconsin was consistently ranked as one of the top states for schools, higher education, healthcare, pensions, tourism, millennials and retirees.

Prior to serving as the 45th Governor of Wisconsin, Scott was the Milwaukee County Executive. He was the first Republican to hold that office and was re-elected two times. During his tenure, he cleaned up the major pension scandal he inherited while holding the line on property taxes, lowering debt and the size of the government workforce and winning the national gold medal for the county parks.

Scott worked a variety of jobs – from a dishwasher at a local restaurant to cook at McDonald’s to student manager at a fitness center to sales at IBM. During his senior year at Marquette University, he took a position in marketing and development with the American Red Cross. In 1993, he was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly where he was a leader on tax policy, criminal justice policy, election laws and welfare reform.

Scott and his wife Tonette live in Milwaukee where they are active in their church and various charities. Their adult children, Matt and Alex, live close by in Milwaukee.

Scott enjoys riding his 2003 Harley Davidson Road King, running, hiking, boating, listening to 80’s music, eating custard, cheering for the Packers, Brewers, Bucks, Badgers and Marquette. Most of all, he loves spending quality time with his family and friends.

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